Many thanks to Mark Russell for this documentation. The audio has been slightly tweaked. Twerk away!
Tag Archives: DSLB
SOUNZ and pictures
During the NZSM/Toi Pōneke arts residency, 2024, I was introduced to SOUNZ– the Centre for New Zealand Music. To be honest, I knew about SOUNZ in the peripheral cul-de-sacs of my brain but I thought it was mostly for classical music. And it is, but it is also much more.
It says about itself that it “…champions and promotes the sounds and music of Aotearoa, New Zealand.” It contains a huge collection of music score and such, but I was totally unaware that it has a substantial audio/visual component.
SOUNZ offered to come and video a number of performance associated with the vegetable.machine.animal Guest album launch, as well as a couple of the performances attached to the accompanying exhibition being held at Toi Pōneke. For free! With multiple cameras! and they would do the grunt of editing etc! Quite an amazing offer. My tasks were to perform well, and be responsible for recording the audio – this is quite likely a barrier for many but less insurmountable these days as digital recording devices get smaller, easier to use, and more available.
The video work was completed by Chris Wilson, a production team of team of one. Amazingly easy to work with, and very considerate in the way he set multiple cameras around the stage in ways that did not seem invasive or impinge on the ability to perform. A terrific experience.
I wish again to offer many thanks to the other musicians who took part in these performances: Kedron Parker, Gemma, S. Thompson, David Long, Chrissie Butler, Timothy Morel, Sophia Frudd, Andrew Faleatua (unfortunately not filmed but an audio recording was collected) and Ruby Solly. They are all incredible music makers in their own rights and are worthy of your aural attention.
Thank you to Pyramid Club and Toi Pōneke for the venues.
And, once again, one final thanks to SOUNZ for producing this beautiful documentation, I am very grateful.
DSLB – vegetable.machine.animal residency and tour

We are hours away from hoping onboard a metal bird to wing our way to the island of Taiwan.
We are very fortunate to have the opportunity to spend two months in Tainan, a southern city in Taiwan, in residence at Ting Shuo Hear Say. We have a bunch of projects to explore and experiment with, and we look forwards to sharing these with you in time as they revel themselves to us.
And for added excitement there’s a bunch of show in the middle of the stay. The 7th is tentative, perhaps we go to Hualien, but they have just been impacted by the typhoon. We shall wait and see. The shows will be a combination of playing together as a duo, as solos, or in collaborations with local musicians.
GUEST Album Release, Exhibition and Tour

GUEST has grown into a beast, a beautiful, shimmering monster-body of work that is a full culmination of the 2024 residency.
GUEST has become an album, excerpts from collaborative recording sessions October-December 2024, edited and mixed into 13 tracks, to be released on LP, CD and digital. The album launch is May 30 at Pyramid Club. Performing alongside vegetable.machine.animal with be album guest musicians Chrissie Butler, indigogue brown, Kedron Parker, Timothy Morel, Gemma S Thompson and David Long.
GUEST the exhibition opens at Toi Pōneke on Friday May 30, 5.30pm. There will be a short vegetable.machine.animal performance, but mostly it’ll be a celebration. The exhibition will be centred around hound interspecies sound installation. Alongside this will be images painted during this process, Leadlight window, and the launch of the book SOUNDBITTEN, personal sound stories capturing earworms, aural observations, accidental hearings and imaginary backing tracks.
There are four weekend event during the performance, three concerts and a panel talk. I’m thrilled to have the opportunity to perform again individually with DSLB, Ruby Solly and Andrew Faleatua. The talk, called A Guest among the Guest, facilitated by K Monaghan, Assoc. Prof. Dr Julie Deslippe [Victoria University School of Biological Sciences] and Dr Eli Elinoff [Victoria University School of Social and Cultural Studies].
And then we go on tour!!! All date below but will continue to be updated as more events finalised.
Many thanks to Te Kōkī – New Zealand School of Music at Victoria University, and Toi Pōneke for the ongoing support in completions of this project, Audio Foundation Records, Pyramid Club and to all there others who have helped out along the way!
PRESS RELEASE
What would it sound like if we could interact musically with plants and fungi—if humans stopped to listen and respond? vegetable.machine.animal is an interspecies improvisational trio exploring this question through a hybrid sonic language of biosignals, modular synthesis, and live drums.
Led by drummer Kieran Monaghan, the project transforms living data from plants and fungi into voltage, translated into sound via modular synthesizer. Monaghan responds in real time, creating a feedback loop between human, organism, and machine.Their debut album, GUEST, was recorded during the 2024 Sonic Artist Residency (Creative New Zealand / NZSM / Toi Pōneke) and emerged through open-ended, intuitive sessions.
A diverse group of collaborators was invited to join the process, including Kedron Parker, Nico Buhne, Bill Wood, Ruby Solly, Indigique Brown, David Long, Andrew Faleatua, Andy Wright, Gemma Thompson, Timothy Morel, Mo H. Zareei, Tae Kyung Seo, Issac Smith, and Chrissie Butler.Rather than guiding the music, contributors were invited to follow it—adding their voices to a living, shifting ecology of sound. The result is an album that is rhythmic, irregular, immersive, and alive.GUEST is co-released by Audio Foundation Records (Tāmaki Makaurau) and skirted Records(Te Whanganui-a-Tara).
Kieran Monaghan is a self-taught multi-instrumentalist, writer, recording artist and sound engineer based in Te Whanganui-A-Tara. He is a prolific creative and organiser, with an irrepressible DIY ethic, known for his experimental and innovative approach to performance and sound making.
ALBUM RELEASE TOUR

May
Friday 30 – ALBUM LAUNCH – Pyramid Club – with Chrissie Butler, indigogue brown, Kedron Parker, Timothy Morel, Gemma S Thompson and David Long – TICKETS
June
Friday 6 – Exhibition Opening , Toi Pōneke Arts Centre, Pōneke/Wellington – 5.30pm
Saturday 7 – Performance – vegetable.machine.animal and DSLB, Toi Pōneke Arts Centre, 1 – 1.45pm, free entry
Saturday 14 – Panel Talk – Guest among the Guests – A discussion exploring the intersection of creativity, biological sciences, and anthropological perspectives: Facilitated by Kieran Monaghan, Dr Julie Deslippe, Dr Eli Elinoff – 1pm – free entry
Saturday 21 – Performance – vegetable.machine.animal and Ruby Solly – Toi Pōneke Arts Centre, 1 – 1.45pm, free entry
Saturday 28 – Performance – vegetable.machine.animal and Andrew Faleatua – Toi Pōneke Arts Centre, 1 – 1.45pm, free entry
July
Thursday 17 – The Blue House, Patea
Friday 18 – Last Place, Kirikiriroa/Hamilton – with Moon Hotene and Halcyon BirdsSaturday 19 – Instore – Flying Out Records, Tāmaki Makaurau/Auckland, 2pm
Saturday 19 – Audio Foundation, Tāmaki Makaurau/Auckland – v.m.a with Taekyung Sea, O/PUS and Oxsen OxThursday 24 – Common Room, Heretaunga /Hastings – with Invisible Plain
Friday 25 – Snails, Te Papa-i-Oea./Palmerston North – with Powers,
Saturday 26 – Porridge Watson, Whanganui – with XRVR & ROC///OPT/
Sunday 27 – Common Ground Presents, Pae Tū Mōkai/Featherston – with indigogue brown
Thursday 31 – Brayshaw Park Chapel, Te Waiharakeke/Blenheim – with Twin Rudders
August
Friday 1 – Space Academy, Ōtautahi/Christchurch – with Cuticles and Haunts
Sunday 3 – Union Chapel, Ōhinehou/Lyttleton – Tropical Hot Dog Night! – with Greg Larking, Beth Hilton, Taipua Adams, Gemma Syme, Nic Woollaston, Rory Dalley, Dave Imlay
Wednesday 6 – Te Atamira, Tāhuna/Queenstown – solo
Friday 8 – Live to air on Radio One
Friday 8 – The Crown, Ōtepoti/Dunedin – with HōHā, Sewage and Murgatroyd
Saturday 9 – Threes and Sevens Records, Waihōpai/Invercargill – with Murgatroyd and Hattford
Autumn 2025: Chrissie Butler – Audio Foundation Artist in Residence

I am just back from the Audio Foundation Autumn residency with 8 hours of ideas.
The residency was open in terms of output. No external pressure to “make a thing”, just a chance to nudge some ideas into the light. After a few days of pulling a random array of instruments out of cupboards and off shelves, I settled on working with 6 organs, a prepared piano, a glock, a selection of bowls and sound makers kindly lent by Chris O’Connor and two metal trolleys.

Jeff Henderson, AF director, generously mic’ed everything up, set me up with a recording session on Reaper, we set levels and he left me to it. It is rare that the gig room at AF is unscheduled for such a long period, but the clustering of stat holidays resulted in a gig void, some time off for the AF team and an empty room for me.
It was a new experience recording in a large space for days at a time alone. It took a while to drop into that mental space where the rest of the world fades and your focus narrows to only what you’re making. I value these times out of time so much.
I didn’t really have a plan. I knew I wanted to bring home a collection of tones and drones but beyond that I just played for hours, listened back, culled the dross and kept ideas I felt I could develop. Once I had a first cluster of ideas down from each instrument, I moved everything from AFs computer to my laptop and began overdubbing. This was a more familiar way of working, layering new sounds and ideas up in real time, playing along with myself.

When I’m working like this I often take and make videos. They help me see the sound as well as hear it. Below is an example.
Huge thanks to the Audio Foundation (especially Jeff and Sam) for the invitation and opportunity to spend 8 days researching and developing new work. Thanks for making me welcome and making it easy.
DSLB Driving Creek installation live

For the month of November in 2023, Kieran and I headed to the Coromandel to be Artists-in-Residence at Driving Creek Railway and Pottery. The fruit of those 4 weeks for me was the album Driving Creek, a multi-layered soundscape mapping dawn til dusk.
For the potters-in-residence, there is a provocation to leave a piece of work. As someone who works with sound, leaving an artefact took a bit more thinking. But now Driving Creek, the album, is “installed” in the Driving Creek, the location and community. A poster (see below) with a QR code takes listeners to the album. Tourists can listen whilst waiting for the train, residents and staff can listen whilst doing the dishes, laying rails, or throwing pots. Everyone can listen for free, and for a small fee, the album can be downloaded.
The poster has been up for a few days, and we can see from the stats that people are dipping in for a listen.
If you haven’t had a listen, we’d welcome your ears. The album has been warmly received, and I think it’s the best solo work I’ve made to date.
And here’s the poster with a photo of me recording the “Down Pour” track above, using all the discarded cups.

Many thanks to Kieran for the design of the poster, to Callum for the thumbs up and to Riccardo for herding cats and getting the posters up.
There Are No More Four Seasons (Sweden) / DSLB / Phil Brownlee

Body
THERE ARE NO MORE FOUR SEASONS
There Are No More Four Seasons is the name of a Swedish duo of electronic musician Mattias Petersson and violinist George Kentros. Taking older pieces of music and recomposing them to once again become relevant to our times. Their self-titled debut was named one of the ten best classical recordings of the past decade by DN, and Time Out New York called them a must see concert.
DSLB
DSLB is the solo project of Chrissie Butler (the shouty bass playing half of the now sleeping duo, mr sterile Assembly). An offshoot from Chrissie’s other band Ditzy Squall, DSLB (Ditzy Squall’s Lunch Box) is a showcase for a love of long endings and the hum things make when you hold them close to your ear. Performed live, DSLB is an improvised mash-up of ancient record players, purring keyboards, kitchen utensils and found objects. Soundtracks for short films and hand drawn comics are also residents in the lunch box. Recordings are released by skirted Records.
PHIL BROWNLEE
Phil Brownlee is a composer and audio artist based in Te Awa Kairangi, working with computer manipulation of environmental sound. Performing ‘Filament’, a live drone event with kitchen recordings drawn out into long threads of sound.
Special thanks to Creative New Zealand for supporting Pyramid Club’s programme
Moat of Rest

Quietly, we go into the week. a lot of sound waves were generated last week, in studio and at shows. Some calm is welcome. There are some practical tasks to complete.
I have been invited to contribute a set of posters for an exhibition, opening in December. The gallery is called Te Atamira, a purpose-built ‘community arts and cultural space’ in Queenstown. I spend Monday figuring out the logistics of hanging when I am unable to assist with the physical installation. I want the posters to have some movement as they hang out from the wall. Hanging/floating parallel to the wall, I want the space between the paper and the surface to contract and expand, but not twist.

The drawing project developed as an accidental pastime during the DCR residency, November 2023. It was never intended to become a thing. I had just planned to take some paper and paints to doodle in the downtime. I haven’t had the inclination to write big songs like we sung in sterile, committing 3-4-5 words to a piece of paper seemed satisfying enough.
It was a pastime without expectation. I enjoyed scratching out the blockiness of the letters. Abstracted shapes presented themselves when I wrote the second text over the first, I’ve always had a thing for negative space. I like the vagueness and flexibility of context and interpretation when punctuation is removed. And the chance to just play with colour brought it’s own pleasure.
Many of the phrases came from text that I was reading, descriptors that had extra possibilities tucked inside when lived out of the original context, multiple meanings presenting from a very economic sentence.
This will be the third time I have been able to display publicly this year, not bad for an accident.
And then I became inhabited. The last week or so has been more social than usual. Maybe someone from a bus ride, a cafe, or an audience was feely poorly, perhaps, or maybe not, was harboring a virus that has made me home. Nothing too bad, not CoVID, according to the RAT, but it’s bad enough for me to isolate at home for a few days.
It’s made some space to catch up on the accumulated recordings so far. Re-listening is a time-intensive task that requires a distant objectivity, not always easy to maintain. If listening back is too close to the recording session, then the excitement of the experience can get in the way of discernment. Things that were called mistakes at the time of recording may still sound like errors. With some distance, though, those ‘errors’ may blur into something more inspired, an accident of greater interest. Errors may be hypercritical reflections from a fragile ego. Inspired accidents may be discovered when the ego is belted down firmly in the backseat. These unexpected musical deviations can often be the thing that captures and maintains interest over multiple listens.
Also, ideas start to swirl in relation to the exhibition to be installed in June 2025 at Toi Pōneke. First ideas are not final ideas, but I’m often in a much more comfortable space once I have something to edit.

Patience for admin has never been a strong streak. When the motivation is brewing, all i want to do is just get on with the doing. However, this unplanned pause from the studio has actually been pretty helpful. For example, I was listening to the collaborated recordings with Chrissie and her DSLB project today. To be honest, I was uncertain about them directly after, I didn’t think my playing was as interesting as it could have been. But on listening today, with a good few weeks in between, I hear new patterns, textures, bursts of interest, and surprise. I have a few more sessions planned to add to this collaboration project. It’s off to a great start.
However, all that said, I’m over the calm, I’m ready to get back the studio.
Soundbites
- Trees roil like kelp in a sea of wind. Birds swim in currents. I wonder, do fish hear the bull-kelp roar? It’s night’s middle, listen to the norwester, crest first, then bear down. Whipping all tall growth that stands above scrub. Every leaf and branch a wood/wind reed. Everything that rattles will. I feel pressure change from an ocean of air inside ears.
- Chest Sounds: wheeze, stridor, crackles, rhonchi. rasp, pleural rub. Auscultation – play the skin of drum, hear the resonance and density from percussion. An ear to a wall, listen for the In’s, the out’s, the rate and delay, for wet sounds, other sounds, no sound. Pay attention when Cheyne-Stokes sings, the song of the lungs soon end.
- Susurration is a burble in rainfall. It shimmer in choir as puddles, rivers, Oceans return. The chatter of uncountable billions when surface tension meets matter. The blurred accents of drops on wood, earth, tin, skin, wing, and kin. Wet squall murmurate, shift, accommodate the fluid response to gust, current, and eddy. Sleep well inside weathers lullaby.
- Guns at the front door of the farmhouse, none in the new home in town. I make a replica of wood. Find a single bullet in the garage. “That’ll look cool”! Make it fit, hit with hammer. !Silence! Mum calling, runs to me, eyes up, I hear Nothing. Absolute Quiet. Did hearing return? Yes. In time to be berated, rightly so, as she digs pellets from skin with a pin.
- The night wind has hands, it lifts liberated cans, and throws down the road. Notes are released, tuned into the tin dents from kicks and wheels. Hear patterns: settled, gusts, roll… duk duk duk..duk….duk! Long, flat streets are best. On main drags, like Dee or Don, you could hear extended canned music. If lucky, it echoes. If extra lucky, power poles wire add their voice in unison.

May The Shifting Ground Hold Me Up

Week three starts on a Saturday. I have been asked to be one of three ‘adjudicators’ for the annual Lilburn Trust NZSM Composers Competition. An adjudicator is a fancy word for judge. I’m to provide insight in determining the pieces of music to receive the annual awards! There are 14 compositions in total, from an array of various university music departments, from classical composition to electronics using AI, from jazz to somber to pop. The selections have been pre-selected from students at differing stages of their study.
We are given the scores to the music to read during the performance. I am unable to do this. It’s a skill I’ve never learned, but I am able to listen attentively. The things I rate are:
- the aliveness of a performance
- the interactions between performers
- the things the performance does to me – what does it evoke?
- those things that take me by surprise
- those things that don’t
- the before’s and after’s of the performance
- the self-responsibility and consideration of stage management-or lack-there-of
and - does the performance match the text/hype of the program
I realise my years of gigging and touring have taught me a great lot of skills that may not be so obvious from the academic tradition. Things that I realise are not so considered here. And I am sure there will be many things I am missing precisely because I have one set of experiential skills instead of an other, more formal, set. The other judges all look at the quality of the script, how the performance adheres to the composition, and how the composition follows certain musical conventions that I am 100% ignorant of.
After hearing the 14, we three have a rapid and robust deliberation deciding on where the awards will go. Happily, a diverse range of performances are selected, acknowledging technical ability, compositional quality, consideration of stage and space, performance bravery, and adventurousness of the composer. But all the performers and composers are deserving of acknowledging and commendation. My final encouragement would be to keep pushing the boat out!!

There is additional newness for me this week. I have a rehearsal space available now every Tuesday, at Toi Pōneke. These are now my main recording days. They also come with a specific focus on collaboration. I invite Chrissie’s project DSLB in, I am safe in her tolerance as I may need to troubleshoot unexpected technical hiccups. The main challenge is to ensure that the right technical equipment is on hand to enable the best recording … it seems to be sufficient. To support this, I have access to some nice microphones from the NZSM. It all works perfectly and after a full day of intense playing, we collect two and a half hours of recorded material.
Near the end of the day, we are both become aware of the fatigue from exertion and concentration. I encourage ‘one more piece’. A lot of sound-ground has been covered. The instruments have been put through the routine of the first familiar and then unfamiliar explorations into sound territories. We both feel a bit spent. But we do it, one more lap around the racetrack. Finishing up, and listening back, what we have hauled in is a lush, atmospheric, angular piece of wonderfulness. it’s going to be exciting to share this work soon.
One of the proposed outcomes of this residency is the making of a V.M.A album. I’ve already done a fair bit of loose, improvised, and searching noodling playing to settle in. This week a framework has started to appear, a framework from which I can hang ideas for the next 9 weeks and beyond.
Almost all of the albums I have been part of in the past have been made during tight times squeezed in and around the rest of ongoing-life. Having slow time to mull on ideas, to consider structure and dynamics, and to explore with dedicated intention is a new and unfamiliar space; luxurious and wonderful.
This time also presents a confronting opportunity. It says ‘here is the time, what do you want to say?’. Brevity and seriousness can flatten playfulness and curiosity. Playfulness and curiosity can distract from the serious act of completion. Somewhere in between there is a middle ground, a place that teeters, a foot-in-both-camps space, and a pivot point that never settles into complacent stillness. It is a sweet spot of creative precariousness and I feel confident that for a time on Tuesday, we were visiting that place.
May this shifting ground hold me up.
SOUNDBITES:
- The melody is guiding my eyes. I become aware, during the performance, that with each change in the music, so too my gaze alters. I’m look upward as the saxophone goes into the higher register. The higher the note, the higher the view. My vision takes in the floor as the lower notes are blown. It’s as if my eyes alone are dancing. The observation of observing my eyes from the inside.
- We wake before the shake. It’s a gut sound, a frequency outside, the house, and our hearing. It is registered in the third-ear of the diaphragm. Guitars bounce on the walls, and the resonance of strings wakes as Richter waves roll through the house. We’re waiting for the next one, with deep and attentive listening in impending silence.
- A cafe house-stereo is playing a grandiose metronome. The three on my right are talking, and I’m inadvertently listening in. I think the words are familiar, but doubt suggests that it’s not my tongue they are speaking in. A dialectical similarity, maybe? Maybe from somewhere else? Is it my hearing loss at fault? Or the terrible acoustics?[but excellent for privacy] Maybe it just their enunciation? Maybe it’s none of my business.
- As the crow flies, we are as close as 9100kms apart, but you ask, ‘Can you hear the busy street?’ You say next to the alleyway of your home is one of the cities main transport arteries. Also, you say, beneath the path in front of your home, is one of the old cities canals. ‘Can we hear it?’ I can hear my belly rumble for dinner, while, perhaps, yours is sleeping just after lunch. This time next year, we will be Here. Then we shall hear.
- The flue of the fireplace is becoming a home for a bird. Claws, like a record players’ stylus, resonating on the circular stainless steel. Each morning, during coffee, we hear its movement. When we move, it stops. Perhaps the chimney acts as a two-way telephone, like old tin cans and string. Or an early-warning stethoscope into our room, alerting the blackbird of downstairs-action. It’s a precarious position to bring kin into the world. We will now be avoiding fires while DJ Blackbird scratches around up top.

Review: Onyx Music Review of DSLB

Skirted Records is a Pōneke (Wellington) based, Aotearoa (New Zealand) label, and they have released the EP “Pass-On-Ings” by a project called DSLB, which is the experimental electronic spawn of Chrissie Butler, who is also one half of Mr Sterile Assembly.
So, we start on “1” with its gradual build-up of horn noise, with minute wavering within their held notes, so if one listens carefully, plus a growing drone in the background. Those held notes are intense and seemingly take on a life of their own. The warbling and rattling nature of “2” makes you think that this is a machine. What sort of machine? Who knows, but the rhythmic noises it makes are very pleasing, and sounds it makes are like the motor had lost its casing, as it is left to run.
In “3,” for the first minute, the sound is so low, you are not sure if anything is playing at all, but gradually you perceive the gentle beeping, as the music blooms, delicate and reverberating. Slowly emerging strains of melody are extruded, like a sea shanty in syrup, and maybe it was suddenly consumed by the waters, for all goes quiet. Track “4” is the loudest, though for me, it might also be the most poignant, as if there is a loneliness within the horn like sounds, calling out to the world without any reply, other than the random rhythms.
There is a fragility to the EP, with the music a mixture of instruments and electronic programming. The softest of sounds holds as much attention as the loudest, with each note and drone weaving a soundscape. DSLB is opening up new worlds with Pass-On-Ings.



